1937 ""H WCHIGAN DAILY +.TI..LE MICHIG.v. . vr aN ftenaT LY Rushing Rules Are Amended By Panhellenic Sororities To Have Choice Of One Saturday Affair; Silence Period Shorter Several changes, including the elimination of a crowded Saturday, were made in the rules for the formal period of sorority rushing yesterday at a meeting of Panhellenic Associa- tion in the League. In place of both a dinner and luncheon on the two Saturdays dur- ing the formal rushing period, the sororities will be given a choice of either for the two weeks. This will eliminate the confusion caused by the two affairs and a football game all in one day, Harriet Shackleton, '38, president, explained. To Eliinat Last Monday Dinner Formal rushing will commence as in the past, with initial teas being held the first Saturday and Sunday of the fall term. Dinners, formerly held Tuesday and Thursday of the first two weeks of the three-week formal period, will be held Monday, Wednesday and Friday of the first / two weeks with the dinner cn the Monday of the third week being eliminated. This is the only event on the rushing calendar which is being completely done away with, Miss Shackleton said. Another change in the rushing schedule is the forwarding of the formal dinners from Tuesday and Wednesday to Monday and Tuesday nights of the third week. Silence Period Shortened As a result of the above revision the silence period will begin Wednes- day o$ the third week. A shortening of the silence period was also adopted at the meeting. It will now run from Wednesday to 6 p.m. Saturday, end- ing immediately after the pledging ceremonies S a t u rd a y afternoon Freshmen will hand in their prefer- ence slips Wednesday and the soror- ities will also submit their lists to the Dean's Office that same day. Bids will come out Friday and pledging will take place Saturday. i It was decided at the meeting to incorporate a map of the sororities and vicinities in the Panhellenic rush- ing booklet for freshmen. other minor changes will also be described in the pamphlet, Miss Shackleton said. Revision Committee Named The changes adopted by the soror- ity representatives yesterday, were drawn up by a committee on the re- vision of rushing rules. The com- mittee consists of Margaret Hamilton,. '37, Jenny Petersen, '39, and Dorothy Arnold, '39.. A prize will be awarded to the sor- ority or fraternity showing the most improvement in the appearance of its, chapter house by the end of the se- mester by the Ann Arbor Committee oh Civic Improvement, according to Mrs. Paul Leidy of that group.- TYPEWRITERS All makes and models, Bought, Sold, Rented, Exchanged, Repaired.1 0. D. Merrill 314 SOUTH STATE STREET 1 Carnival Scene Predicts Gay Play The above scene is from "The Merchant of Venice," which will be given May 22 to May 26 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. This is the sceord nreduetion in the 1937 Dramatic Season under thke direction of Robcrt Hcnderson. A similar presentation of the play is now in its tighth week at the Hollywood Playhouse in Hollywood, where it has crjeycd the longest run of a Shakespearean play ever given on the West Coast. Following the Ann Arbor production, it will reopen at the Grcck Thiatre in Hollywood. Tea To Honor No -Affiliates Will Be Friday Ingenious Buttons Le'dul Chic Touches To poils Clothes Button up and be smart! At lastf the age old and practical button has Barbara Heath To Be Head come into its own. This spring, try Of League Affair; Zwick to find a sensible button. A certain Ann Arbor shop was fea- To Play For Dancing turing buttons not long ago in shapes of fish, acorns, vegetables, fruit and Women living in League houses are all sorts of animals. One very chic to be honored at the League under- graduate tea, to be held from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday in the League Ballroom, it was announced by Barbara Heath, '39, in charge of arrangements. A new seating arrangement will be introduced at the tea, Miss Heath said. Ten large tables are to be set up, each seating 30 women, and one official hostess will be placed at each table with four other hostesses assist- ing her. As she enters the ballroom, each woman attending is to draw a number from a box at the door. The number will be that of the table at which she is to sit. Mary Jayne Kronner, '40, is to be in charge of the box and Charlotte Poock, '39, and Ann Cif- ford, '39, will also be ,stationed at the door. Official hostesses for the affair are Jean Bonisteel, '38, Marcia Connell,! '39, Margaret Cram, '39, Virginia Ea- glesfield, '39, Jean Hanson, '38, Jeani Lillie, '39, Stephanie Parfet, '39, Har- r iet Pomeroy, '39, Priscilla Smith, '38, and Barbara Teall, '39. There will also be a receiving line of members of the League social com-{ mittee, under the direction of Betty Gatward, '38, chairman.I Miss Eaglesfield has been appoint- ed senior assistant and Miss Teall has ' been named junior assistant of the committee, Miss Gatward said. Those who have been invited to pour will be announced later, MissR Heath said. Charlie Zwick and his orchestra will play for dancing. TAU EPSILON RHO' l aquamarine flannel sports dress fea- tured animals, each one made of a hard, translucent material of a clif- ferent color. For all sports wear, buttons tend toward the fantastic side, and come in a multitude of colors that match or contrast. A smart cardigan swea- ter of lavender cashmere proudly flaunted glass pink elephants with small gold-tipped tusks and small red eyes. Anything will do for a button, and if you want to be ingenious, take your old charm bracelet apart and sew the charms on your favorite sweater or sport dress. Ruth vens Plan Eifyhth Student ITea' For Today President and Mrs. Ruthven will entertain the undergraduate students of the University from 4 to 6 p.m., to- day at their home. This will mark the eighth in the series of teas and will the first to be given since Easter vacation. Various members of the Under- graduate Council have again been invited to pour. The four women who are invited are Joanne Kimmell, '38, chairman of the Theatre Arts Com- mittee, Hope Hartwig, '38, president of the League, Florence McConkey, '38A, League vice-president, and An- Second Annual lantes Give Dinner I Capitalists Ball i Cabaret Fashion The annual banquet of the Mich- (. ( Saturday: igan Dames which was held at 6:30 p.m. yesterday in the League, was S Agiven in the form of a cabaret dinner yWlith a floor show. Mrs. Lewis F. The Scholarship Dinner Haines, president of the Dames, was Prior To The Ball general chairman of the dinner. Honored guests include Mrs. Alex- The second annual Capitalists Ball, inder G. Ruthven, faculty adviser of given by the School of Business Ad- the Dames, Mrs. Edward L.Adams, ministration, will be held from 9 p.m. Dr. Margaret Bell, Mrs. WilliamW. to midniglt Saturday, in the Wom- Bishop, Mrs. George E. Carrothers en's Atheltic Building.Bihp The ico-chairmen planning the Mrs. Roy W. Cowden, Mrs. G. Carl dance are Frank Brown, '37BAd, and Huber, Mrs. Russell C. Hussey, Dr. Robert Halsted, '38BAd. The ball will Lavinia MacKaye, Miss Ethel A. Mc- be a spring formal and Russ Rollins' Cormick, Mrs. Ira W. Smith, Mrs. orchestra will play. Carl V. Weller, Mrs. Ralph Aigler and The patrons and patronesses in- Mrs. Alfred H. White. vited to attend the dance are Dean Decorations for the affair of which and Mrs. C. E. Griffin, Prof. Robert Mrs. Paul Cramton was in chare, G. Rodkey, Prof. and Mrs. Olin W. were made up of corsages fo all Blackett, Prof. and Mrs. Edgar H. members and guests and balloons Balatt, Prof. andGeorse.EdgHlwere used at the tables. Other com- Gault, Prof. and George L. Hull, mittee chairmen are Miss McCor- Prof. and Mrs. Carles L. Jamsmick, social chairman; Mrs. Edward Prof. and Mrs. John W. Riegel, Prof. ard, program chairman, and Mrs. and Mrs. Herbert F. Taggart, Prof. Gerrot DeWeerd, ticket chairman and Mrs. Earl S. Wolaver, and Mr. and Mrs. Hampton H. Irwin. Watch Repairing To Hold Alumni Conference In the afternoon, an alumni con- HALLER'S ference of the business school will be held at the Union. Various businessSae ery discussions will be held by the alumni State and Liberty who are coming from different places around Ann Arbor, and especially - from Detroit. After the meeting, an alumni din- ner will be held at the Union. At this time, various scholarship awards will be given to the outstanding stu- dents in the business school this past year. All the professors at the busi- ness school, the alumni, and stu- dents being awarded will attend the dinner. Following the dinner, the alumni will remain in Ann Arbor for the dance. Fraternities Cooperate Alpha Kappa Psi and Delta Sig- ma Pi, the two fraternities connected with the business school, are cooper- atively assisting in the plans for the dance. The Capitalists Ball was first * C O M held last year, and the precedent is being continued this year with plans already underway for an even larger ball next year. The dance will be open and tickets may be obtained at the business school for $1, according to John *L Doelle, '38BAd, publicity chairman. As there are approximately 100 stu- dents in the School of Business Ad- ministration, there will be only about 50 tickets for sale to the public so anyone wishing to purchase a ticket is urged to do so at once, Doelle said. Game At Palmer Field 0 JACI Interrupted By ROTC After conceding a point to the R.O.T.C. who marched through their baseball game on Palmer Field for their weekly Tuesday parade by standing at attention while the R.O.- T.C. band played the Star Spangled Banner, the Martha Cook-Alpha Ep- silon Phi baseball teams went on with one of the noisiest games of the sea- son. The Martha Cook team defeated the A. E. Phi group 19-1, and the Ann Arbor Independents beat a group from Helen Newberry 18-1 in an ear- lier game. The other two games scheduled for the afternoon were cancelled. McGEOCH TO SPEAK The Faculty Women's Club will sponsor a special program at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the League, at which Glenn D. McGeoch, instructor in the history of music, will speak. I Tau Epsilon Rho, legal fraternity, gelene Maliszewski, '38, head of Ju- announces the election of officers. diciary Council. Erwin Ellman, '38, was elected chan- Among those to be honored at the cellor; Mitchell Feldman, '38, vice tea are the Ann Arbor Independents, chancellor; Theodore H. Weiss, '39, Delta Gamma, Pi Beta Phi and Phi master of the rolls; and Arthur N. K. Sigma Sigma. The fraternities who Friedman, '39, bursar. are specially invited are Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Delta Rho and Phi Sigma Delta. All other H P undergraduate students of the Uni- S H P vgsity are also cordially invited to attend, according to Betty Gatward, Liberty '38, chairman of the League social ROBERT 604 East y. 0; <$4\lU, o I I JillL. Lgee i They're Here! , A, / ((< 74f - /', A- =f A ., / . MOTH ER'S P A Y gorgeous new arrivqls - - in W WIT E YoU silmnIv M ST see thece 0 gift hune No moher everhad enogh stockings . not even Fieldcrest La Franc 5tckinUs that we ar and wear and wear! 95 I